Using Activities to Become a Michigan Green School

A school is eligible to receive a Green School, Emerald School, or Evergreen School Environmental Stewardship Designation if the school or students perform the required number of activities, with a minimum of two activities from each of the four categories. The activity requirements for each level of environmental stewardship designation are as follows:

Green School | 10 total activities with at least two activities from each of the four categories

Emerald School| 15 total activities at least two activities from each of the four categories

Evergreen School| 20 total activities at least two activities from each of the four categories

The four categories of activities for official green school qualification are:

Reduce/Reuse/Recycle

Energy

Environmental Protection

Miscellaneous.

Check out the application for the specifics on the activities in each of the four categories.

In addition to the activities listed in the table portion of the application, a school may design and propose another activity, listed as “other”, which may qualify toward an environmental designation.

Important Note: All alternate activities listed as "other" must be approved by your Michigan Green School County Coordinator by December 1, 2017. All applications are due March 1, 2018.

​Answer to the front page quiz question Michigan ranks 24th among states for air quality according to the 2017 American Lung Association Report.

Rapid City Elementary, Kalkaska Public Schools, show off their Michigan Green School reusable water bottles.

Some Suggested Activities for 2017-18​

Host a plastic bag collection contest between classes similar to phone book drives that were so successful. Students will be surprised at the volume of bags they have at home and around their neighborhoods.

Help get some Zambian green schools up and running. They need funds for seedlings, compost and other projects. Make check payable to Zambian Green School fund and send to PO Box 76, Lawrence, MI. 49064

We are looking for fourth and fifth grade classes to be penpals with Zambian students in the town of Ndola. Students would share some of their green projects ideas and learn what life is like in Zambia. Contact us for more info.

​Have students research a great new idea getting started in Canada and the US to set up a wildlife corridor connecting national parks in both nations. This is a major step to protecting endangered species. Find ways to help these efforts.​​

​Make a poster of what fish are overfished and should be avoided so stocks can recover. The Environmental Defense Fund posts the varieties at seafood.edf.org

Make posters or flyers showing where motor oil recycling centers are in your county. Livingston County had a art contest with an oil recycling logo. They made color copies and took them to gas stations, recycling centers, and car repair shops to let people know there is a responsible way to dispose of oil.​

Serious about reducing plastic bottle waste? Eco clubs should visit the Hydration Nation website. Another eco step is buying school cafeteria eggs and other packaged items in cardboard, not styrofoam containers.

Pentwater Green Schools Club next to their new water bottle filling station. As students refill their bottles, the station provides a running estimate of how many water bottles are being kept out of landfills.

​

Have a poster contest promoting new ways to recycle items like markers​.

​Learn more about our declining bat population. A virus called white nose syndrome has wiped out colonies in some states. One bat eats as much as 3000 mosquitos making them valuable to our public health. The Cranbrook Institute in Rochester is a great source of information and visuals. Go online to learn how to make a bat house.

Have students contact their local government offices and see what they are doing to protect the local environment. For example, the city of Saginaw is installing led lights in town. Many towns are instituting plastic bags bans. What is your town doing?

Plan for installing a rain garden which protects Michigan groundwater and streams. This is very popular in western Michigan.

Adopt a policy of buying some chlorine free office paper to help this industry grow. Chlorine from paper processing is a major polluter.

Have a geography map lesson with cities and countries doing great new environmental projects. Discuss how Michigan stacks up with them.

Cornell University is asking for your photos of Ladybugs for a national study of their variety and numbers. Submit your photos and your location to ladybug@cornell.edu Did you know you can buy packages of lady bugs for pesticide free insect control? Great idea to plan for next spring.

Host an old towel and fleece blanket drive. Our animal shelters need these items consistently. Check-in with your town's shelter to drop off these items. Bring old carpet cut into squares so animals dont have to sleep on cold concrete floors.

Plan your garden with native Michigan plants. All of the plants listed below support Michigan wildlife and our falling bee population. Above all, make sure that your garden is pesticide free for the health of students, to protect the bees, and other creatures.

Blue Lupine

Coneflowers

Black-eyed Susans

Blazing Star

Goldenrod​

New items that can be recycled are pens, markers, toothbrushes and toothpaste tubes. Have students make a canister to put in the library, or another popular location in the school, and drop them off. Classrooms can have a contest! Terracycle.com pays schools for these items. Ask your local library to have a bin as well for students to collect monthly,

Hold an old pots and pans drive. Each county has a metal recycling facility. Great way to get rid of old teflon items. Centers are easy to find online and many pay by the pound. This is a great way to earn class funds

Host a speaker to talk about ways to protect our seriously declining honey bee population. It has dropped by over 30%! Bees are necessary to pollinate so many of our crops. Check to see what state and local agencies are hosting bee protection seminars. Design a bee information bulletin board like the Goens Learning Center in Van Buren County. Dexter Elementary has created a beekeeping club!

Adopt an endangered animal. Many schools vote on what animal they will ceremonially adopt from The Defenders of Wildlife, World Wildlife Federation, local nature center, or other worthwhile organizations that can be found online. The school receives a picture, a stuffed animal to display, and a certificate of adoption!

Have a Save the Frogs bracelet sale. The world's frogs, which support sensitive ecosystems, are going extinct at a surprising rate. These creatures support other animals up the food chain making their loss even more grave. SavetheFrogs.com has a kit with all the materials an ecology or school green team needs. ​

Raise awareness of the federally endangered Karner Blue butterfly by printing out this 8.5" x 11" coloring sheet for children to color. Read more about the Karner Blue in the Michigan Wildlife Awareness sidebar on our About Us page with more ideas for activities.

Save the Hawk coloring sheet. An accurate coloring chart is also available by visiting the tool bar under more... on this website. Schools can also discover a number of Michigan threatened and endangered species by looking at the book, Fly Over Michigan. There are coloring pages with an accurate coloring chart for Kirtland's Warbler, the short eared owl and others. The book is available on amazon.

Fun Ways to Earn Points!

Many Michigan Green Schools are developing waste free lunch plans. This saves the school money, student calories and keeps the most harmful greenhouse gas, methane, at lower levels.

Michigan Wildlife Awareness

Photo by James Harding, Michigan DNR

The trumpeter swan is a threatened species in Michigan. These swans are often confused with snow geese and mistakenly shot by hunters. 1,300 trumpeters have died in the United States from lead poisoning when they ingest lead shot and lead sinkers in ponds.